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AmilcarCabral
1st November 2013, 05:15
The NSA is spying on the US President

By Andrew P. Napolitano

October 31, 2013 "Information Clearing House - When German Chancellor Angela Merkel celebrated the opening of the new U.S. embassy in Berlin in 2008, she could not have imagined that she was blessing the workplace for the largest and most effective gaggle of American spies anywhere outside of the U.S.

It seems straight out of a grade-B movie, but it has been happening for the past eleven years: The NSA has been using Merkel to spy on the president of the United States. We now know that the NSA has been listening to and recording Merkel’s cellphone calls since 2002. In 2008, when the new embassy opened, the NSA began using more sophisticated techniques that included not only listening, but also following her. Merkel uses her cellphone more frequently than her landline, and she uses it to communicate with her husband and family members, the leadership of her political party, and her colleagues and officials in the German government.

She also uses her cellphone to speak with foreign leaders, among whom have been President George W. Bush and President Obama. Thus, the NSA – which Bush and Obama have unlawfully and unconstitutionally authorized to obtain and retain digital copies of all telephone conversations, texts and emails of everyone in the U.S., as well as those of hundreds of millions of persons in Europe and Latin America – has been listening to the telephone calls of both American presidents whenever they have spoken with the chancellor.

One could understand the NSA’s propensity to listen to the conversations of those foreign leaders who wish us ill. And one would expect that it would do so. But the urge to listen to the leadership of our allies serves no discernible intelligence-gathering purpose. Rather, it fuels distrust between our nations and in the case of Merkel exacerbates memories of the all-seeing and all-hearing Stasi, which was the East German version of the KGB that ruled that police state from the end of World War II until it collapsed in 1989. Merkel was raised in East Germany, and she has a personal revulsion at the concept of omnipresent state surveillance.

Obama apparently has no such revulsion. One would think he’s not happy that his own spies have been listening to him. One would expect that he would have known of this. Not from me, says Gen. Keith Alexander, the director of the NSA, who disputed claims in the media that he told Obama of the NSA spying network in Germany last summer. Either the president knew of this and has denied it, or he is invincibly ignorant of the forces he has unleashed on us and on himself.

When Susan Rice, Obama’s national security advisor, was confronted with all of this by her German counterpart, she first told him the White House would deny it. Then she called him to say that the White House could not deny it, but the president would deny that he personally knew of it.

How did we get here? What are the consequences of a president spying on himself? What does this mean for the rest of us?

Neither Bush nor Obama has had a strong fidelity to the Constitution. They share the views of another odd couple of presidents from opposing political parties, Teddy Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, in that the Constitution is not the supreme law of the land as it proclaims to be, but rather a guideline that unleashes the president to do all that it does not expressly forbid him to do. In the progressive era 100 years ago, that presidential attitude brought us the Federal Reserve, the federal income tax, Prohibition, World War I, prosecutions for speech critical of the government and the beginnings of official modern government racial segregation.

That same attitude in our era has brought us the Patriot Act, which allows federal agents to write their own search warrants, government borrowing that knows no end – including the $2 trillion Bush borrowed for the war in Iraq, a country which is now less stable than before Bush invaded, and the $7 trillion Obama borrowed to redistribute – and an NSA that monitors all Americans all the time. In the case of the NSA spying, this came about by the secret orders of Bush and Obama, animated by that perverse TR/Wilsonian view of the Constitution and not by a congressional vote after a great national debate.

Just as people change when they know they are being watched, the government changes when it knows no one can watch it. Just as we can never be ourselves when we fear that we may need to justify our most intimate thoughts to an all-knowing government, so, too, the government knows that when we cannot see what it is doing, it can do whatever it wants. And it is in the nature of government to expand, not shrink. Thomas Jefferson correctly predicted that 175 years ago.

But spying on yourself is truly asinine and perhaps criminal. You see, the president can officially declassify any secrets he wants, but he cannot – without official declassification – simply reveal them to NSA agents. One can only imagine what NSA agents learned from listening to Bush and Obama as they spoke to Merkel and 34 other friendly foreign leaders, as yet unidentified publicly.

Now we know how pervasive this NSA spying is: It not only reaches the Supreme Court, the Pentagon, the CIA, the local police and the cellphones and homes of all Americans; it reaches the Oval Office itself. Yet when the president denies that he knows of this, that denial leads to more questions.

The president claims he can start secret foreign wars using the CIA, secretly kill Americans using drones, and now secretly spy on anyone anywhere using the NSA. Is the president an unwitting dupe to a secret rats’ nest of uncontrolled government spies and killers? Or is he a megalomaniacal, totalitarian secret micromanager who lies regularly, consistently and systematically about the role of government in our lives?

Which is worse?

Source: informationclearinghouse.info




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ckaihatsu
3rd November 2013, 18:23
Looks like it's going to be Kerry vs. Feinstein -- !


Kerry - Some of NSA's Actions 'reached Too Far'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWIdYFog464


Feinstein claims NSA spying is 'legal'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqZJNvV8qlA

tuwix
4th November 2013, 06:10
The NSA is spying on the US President


Isn't just easier to say who isn't spied? :)

Hexen
4th November 2013, 06:26
Source: informationclearinghouse.info

Well considering that information clearing house is another one of those conspiracy sites that one would lose credibility on.

Sea
4th November 2013, 07:37
I can't find it corroborated anywhere. Yes, corroboration is important.

Hexen
4th November 2013, 14:16
I can't find it corroborated anywhere. Yes, corroboration is important.

Which you'll quickly see why anything that comes from a conspiracy site cannot be corroborated on because they don't exist outside those circles which they're either based on something that is taken out of context or complete hoaxes which alludes back to their tabloid nature.

Vladimir Innit Lenin
4th November 2013, 15:57
I find it incredible that Angela Merkel has been using a cellphone for a decade that has been capable of being tracked. Maybe i've been watching too many American movies, but I was under the impression that secret service and government types were issued with un-trackable phones?

Ethics Gradient, Traitor For All Ages
4th November 2013, 16:13
Unless they create their own cell networks everything they use will be tracked. They made a big deal about Obama using a blackberry when he first took office because they had never had to deal with a president using one before. I think bush used to brag about never having learned to use email.

Halert
4th November 2013, 16:34
I find it incredible that Angela Merkel has been using a cellphone for a decade that has been capable of being tracked. Maybe i've been watching too many American movies, but I was under the impression that secret service and government types were issued with un-trackable phones?

They don't use untraceable phones. Since a more modern phone like a Samsung galaxy or an iphone is just as easy to trace as an old phone the whole critique against merkel for using an old phone is unjustified. There are untraceable phones but you can only call other untraceable phones on the same network with it. So a phone like that can only be used for a small percentage of the calls if it is used at all.

Münchhausen
4th November 2013, 16:36
I find it incredible that Angela Merkel has been using a cellphone for a decade that has been capable of being tracked. Maybe i've been watching too many American movies, but I was under the impression that secret service and government types were issued with un-trackable phones?

After the tapping of her cellphone became public, government spokespersons were quick to assure that all imporant government-business is handled through a totally secure and untappable landline, so they have that too i suppose...
But apparently it's only used for top-security stuff, after all i can't imagine they'd monitor her cell phone if it's only used for private talk.

Os Cangaceiros
4th November 2013, 22:32
Merkel should use a different phone every day like Chapo Guzman supposedly does. That'll show 'em!

Klaatu
4th November 2013, 23:45
Napolitano is a Fox News "expert." I would not trust anything he says.

ckaihatsu
10th November 2013, 20:34
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_q05DOWZCyQ

The Garbage Disposal Unit
10th November 2013, 20:40
WHEELS WITHIN WHEELS!
But, actually, I think this speaks to the terrifying implications of a runaway machine in which even the most powerful are essentially the "moving parts".

ckaihatsu
22nd November 2013, 22:24
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kf9M7XYCs88

ckaihatsu
24th November 2013, 17:55
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WjtkE07xyAI

ckaihatsu
23rd December 2013, 19:29
NSA, CIA role in murder of FARC leaders exposed

By staff

Washington, DC – The Washington Post, in a major Dec. 21 article entitled “Covert Action in Colombia” confirmed the role of U.S. intelligence agencies in the systematic murder of at least 24 leaders of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), as well as a smaller rebel group. The FARC, Latin America’s largest and oldest insurgent movement, is fighting for social justice and to free the country from foreign domination.

Observers have known for many years that covert ‘signals intelligence’ gleaned by U.S. spy agencies plays an important part in keeping Colombia’s death squad government in power.

The Post article states, “The secret assistance, which also includes substantial eavesdropping help from the National Security Agency, is funded through a multibillion-dollar black budget. It is not a part of the public $9 billion package of mostly U.S. military aid called Plan Colombia, which began in 2000.”

The article says of the targeted killings, “The covert program in Colombia provides two essential services to the nation’s battle against the FARC and a smaller insurgent group, the National Liberation Army (ELN): Real-time intelligence that allows Colombian forces to hunt down individual FARC leaders and, beginning in 2006, one particularly effective tool with which to kill them. That weapon is a $30,000 GPS guidance kit that transforms a less-than-accurate 500-pound gravity bomb into a highly accurate smart bomb.”

The article states that the outstanding Colombia revolutionary, Raul Reyes, was targeted in these attacks.

In the face of harsh repression by U.S. government and its Colombian puppets, the FARC has continued to hold its own, forcing the Colombian government to join a new round of peace talks in Havana.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]






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ckaihatsu
25th December 2013, 18:34
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8F12AGIib0

RedWaves
26th December 2013, 20:20
I don't understand why anyone gives a fuck so much about NSA. Facebook has been doing the same thing NSA does and they've been doing it for years and much better at that, and no one is ever up in arms about how rich Mark Zuckerberg is for data mining people.

The Intransigent Faction
27th December 2013, 21:17
I don't understand why anyone gives a fuck so much about NSA. Facebook has been doing the same thing NSA does and they've been doing it for years and much better at that, and no one is ever up in arms about how rich Mark Zuckerberg is for data mining people.

I don't see how Mark Zuckerberg doing that makes the NSA irrelevant, though. We should of course still oppose it if there weren't a state spy agency that that kind of information could/would be passed on to, but the existence of such does probably make data-mining more worrying than if it were just Facebook threatening everyone with targeted ads for crappy merchandise.

RedWaves
27th December 2013, 21:25
I don't see how Mark Zuckerberg doing that makes the NSA irrelevant, though. We should of course still oppose it if there weren't a state spy agency that that kind of information could/would be passed on to, but the existence of such does probably make data-mining more worrying than if it were just Facebook threatening everyone with targeted ads for crappy merchandise.



Facebook has been doing it for years and no one is ever screaming about that. Google does the same thing too and yet another one that no one gives a flying fuck about. They are whining over the NSA, even though these huge corporations are doing the same thing. It's OK when they do it though, people like it.

Trap Queen Voxxy
27th December 2013, 21:41
For what reason would NSA spy on the president? Is this to confirm if he is or is not a reptilian humanoid?

ckaihatsu
31st December 2013, 21:34
This thread is aptly named -- I really didn't think this issue would get this far, but it has:


Contrasting rulings could take the NSA to the Supreme Court

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JxSfA3gXJ8


This has the makings of a new, full-blown constitutional crisis since the question comes down to who has authority over who -- is the NSA *within* the Executive Branch, or is it *unaccountable* to the presidency -- ?

ckaihatsu
11th January 2014, 17:02
Here's *another* creeping contradiction facing the administration as a result of all of this....


---


NYT criteria for granting clemency all apply to Manning


NYT criteria for Snowden's clemency apply equally to Manning.


Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser. (http://ymlp308.net/z9ltdc)


Bradley Manning Support Network


Snowden and Manning deserve clemency
based on NYT criteria


The reasons given by the NYT to grant Snowden clemency apply equally to Manning!

Last week, the New York Times editorial board thrilled government transparency advocates worldwide when they released an article calling on President Obama to grant clemency to Edward Snowden. They declare him a whistleblower loud and clear in the article’s title, and detail the NSA’s legal and ethical violations which Mr. Snowden uncovered.

Firedoglake’s Kevin Gosztola, who reported on PVT Manning’s trial last summer, praised the NYT for its support of Snowden while challenging them on another point “If Snowden is a whistleblower, what is Chelsea Manning?” This summer the NYT’s editorial board called Manning’s 35 year-sentence “excessive”, but they stopped short of calling her a whistleblower.

There are close parallels in the stories of Snowden and Manning as detailed on Gosztola’s blog:

Just as the Times makes clear that Snowden could not have gone through ‘proper channels,’ it would have been impossible for Manning as well… Had she sent specific documents in the sets to get the attention of members of Congress or had she gone to superiors within the military and said this should not be secret, she most certainly would have lost her security clearance...

Six bullet points on violations Snowden revealed and legal actions he provoked are offered by the Times editors to further advance the argument that he is a whistleblower. Certainly, the same could be done for Manning:


Manning revealed a video of a 2007 Apache helicopter attack, which shows two Reuters journalists being gunned down in Baghdad. The video, which featured soldiers begging superior officers for orders to fire on individuals, was withheld from Reuters, even though the media organization filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.

Frago 242, which the US and the UK appeared to have adopted as a way of excusing them from having to take responsibility for torture or ill-treatment of Iraqis by Iraqi military or security forces, was revealed in the Iraq War Logs.

Yemen president Ali Abdullah Saleh agreed to secretly allow US cruise missile or drone attacks that he would say were launched by his government

Both the administrations of President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama pressured Spain and Germany not to investigate torture authorized by Bush administration officials

US government was well aware of rampant corruption in the Tunisian ruling family of President Ben Ali and the FBI trained torturers in Egypt’s state security service. The information released by Manning was one of the “small things“ that helped to inspire the Arab Spring

Al Jazeera journalist Sami al-Hajj was sent to Guantanamo Bay prison “to provide information” on the “al Jazeera news network’s training program, telecommunications equipment and newsgathering operations in Chechnya, Kosovo and Afghanistan, including the network’s acquisition of a video of [Osama bin Laden] and a subsequent interview” of bin Laden, a clear attack on press freedom

Partly basing its ruling on diplomatic cables Manning released, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), the court condemned the CIA for its extraordinary rendition program and found Macedonia had been responsible for the torture and violation of German car salesman Khaled el-Masri’s rights when he was abducted. Macedonia was ordered to pay $78,500 in damages to Masri.


If you’re wondering why government transparency advocates should present a unified front in fighting for whistleblower protections, you have only to look to the words and experiences of these whistleblowers themselves. While Snowden flees persecution by the same administration and same set of laws that were used to imprison Chelsea, he has clearly stated that ”Manning was a classic whistleblower.” She “was inspired by the public good.”



Do you support both Manning and Snowden? Tell us why on our facebook page. Leave a comment, a graphic, or a picture of you holding a sign with your message. We will share some of our favorite messages and images with our 105,000+ facebook followers in the coming weeks.

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Sea
12th January 2014, 00:13
Do you support both Manning and Snowden? Tell us why on our facebook page. Leave a comment, a graphic, or a picture of you holding a sign with your message. We will share some of our favorite messages and images with our 105,000+ facebook followers in the coming weeks.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure you're name is on a list, Chris.

ckaihatsu
12th January 2014, 17:42
California bill to make life hard for the NSA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pW7MTrp1smw


Pentagon uses secret report to attack Snowden

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7-kFVEneq0

ckaihatsu
17th January 2014, 22:21
NSA's bulk data collection in the crosshairs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-Iar_lPMyY


Sn-Oops! 'NSA spying fails to prevent terrorist attacks'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EVWFvR7rD1Q

ckaihatsu
21st January 2014, 23:23
NSA whistleblower - Obama reforms won't cage 'this monster'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsVYkCxGOgo


Obama tackles NSA reforms, preserves bulk collection

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jj_k6eACy-E


President Proposes New Limits on Govt Spying

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSmSapNAOsY


NSA data collection alternatives rife with drawbacks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msTkXQwmlc4


Did the President's NSA speech win over European critics

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ImCWv1yijY


'Obama speech window dressing to cover NSA abuses'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vZoeB0Riqc


Obama calls for more judicial oversight on NSA data collection

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHcbJBJXboc


Obama lays out plan to curb NSA surveillance program

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9XtqF9vtXw


'Guarantees that Obama gave are worthless'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1T2VI5eka8I


'Baby Steps' - Little hope for big change as Obama offers NSA reform

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAIQqNTNgOI


Obama - U.S. Not Spying on 'Ordinary People'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znx9qb5HKlo


Obama Calls for Changes to Surveillance Programs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6XZLan1VkcY


NSA bulk data collection not cheap or effective in terrorism fight

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYINvE6dr5U


How the NSA used radio waves to spy on offline computers

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhsHs_MehCI


Rep. Holt - It's scary how capable the NSA is

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRUKQmDAVwE


Stasi 2.0 - 'NSA using same illegal spy tactics from Cold War'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UxpaegYNqJ8


Obama Set to Announce NSA Changes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIs5nKWCJN0


'Obama won't curb snooping, aims to prevent whistleblowers from spying inside NSA'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_k6e7gsEWU


Obama expected to preserve NSA programs, add oversight

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zi2Bh8NCNRw


NSA leaker Snowden joins Freedom of the Press Foundation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-aXtHW20xY

ckaihatsu
24th January 2014, 21:16
Snowden requests extra security after receiving death threats

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whjsaRT65rM


Snowden addresses Obama's NSA reforms

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuMoSpHxOGU


Did Edward Snowden act alone in NSA leak

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gvD7wpXa9qo


Poll - Americans don't believe NSA reforms will increase privacy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gwy5sLd_vpU


Microsoft, Facebook - Obama's NSA proposals don't go far enough

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8B-fbqrVKI

ckaihatsu
28th January 2014, 20:43
Court Bombshell - UK blocks sharing US drone intel

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjox5iTpqCM


NSA's big nose in big business - Snowden says agency spies on industry

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewe88U3gyz4


Snowden - 'U.S. is engaged in economic spying'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnQpQ3zja9s


Firm that conducted Snowden background check accused of fraud

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNDF_rhvLOc


Russia to extend Snowden's asylum beyond August

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QAweuLjKThE


Snowden - Bulk data collection is euphemism for mass surveillance

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAjZyFnWRAo


Panel says NSA phone data collection is illegal

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mfs1qI74rU

ckaihatsu
3rd February 2014, 21:49
NSA surveillance revelations sour German perception of Obama

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVxZRqCd-VE


Obama administration nominates new NSA director

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRz_oC2HTCY


Edward Snowden's Norwegian Nobel nomination called into question

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8x1YwfYc5Y


Rand Paul to file class-action lawsuit against NSA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZGOaeDGj-xU


NSA spied on international conference to gain an advantage

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zm_gWAAGSJw


In Germany, memories of repressive national spying inflamed by U.S. surveillance

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wX1SyMLQJ7A


Snowden nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaM8750YIHc


Edward J. Snowden Interview - 'They Wanted to Murder Me'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDHrI4CtAdw


CIA whistleblower's letters from prison deemed 'dangerous'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2TiXvU72tQ


Theater of Absurd - Happy Data Protection Day...oh, and we spy on you!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptRX6AI8PJI


NSA's big nose in big business - Snowden says agency spies on industry

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewe88U3gyz4


Snowden - 'U.S. is engaged in economic spying'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnQpQ3zja9s


Court Bombshell - UK blocks sharing US drone intel

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjox5iTpqCM

ckaihatsu
8th February 2014, 17:02
WikiLeaks - US trying to 'criminalize journalism' over Snowden leaks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzilIJUX4fY

ckaihatsu
13th February 2014, 16:01
'Day We Fight Back' takes on NSA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UiKJRq-kO8g


'The Day We Fight Back' - Netizens rally against NSA in memory of Aaron Swartz

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNcT6-3xwvk

ckaihatsu
13th February 2014, 23:21
MEPs reject Green asylum call for Snowden.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQzQVo-EZ5k

ckaihatsu
14th February 2014, 21:52
NSA headquarters could go dark if bill passes in Maryland

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjnPVQhI2ac

tachosomoza
14th February 2014, 21:54
This is nothing new. J. Edgar Hoover spied on all of the presidents he served under.

ckaihatsu
16th February 2014, 18:37
Ron Paul launches clemency petition for Edward Snowden

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6YIEP6I22Y

ckaihatsu
17th February 2014, 23:46
[LaborTech] The Snowden Effect: From Governmentalized to Privatized & Commoditized

The Snowden Effect: From Governmentalized to Privatized & Commoditized

http://www.boilingfrogspost.com/2014/02/11/the-snowden-effect-from-governmentalized-to-privatized-commoditized/

SIBEL EDMONDS | FEBRUARY 11, 2014 62 COMMENTS

How Safe is Our Information with Billionaire Corporatists & Dollar-Hungry Opportunist Individuals?

Please raise your hand if you are one of many concerned citizens when it comes to our government collecting and keeping your data without a warrant or any justification. Do you see my hand? I know I am a shorty, but it is up there; my hand. I assure you. In fact it has been there for a long time.

Now, please raise your hand if you are a citizen who is highly concerned about your data, personal and public, not only being taken and stored by our government, but also being accessed and stored by other private corporations, private individuals and their foreign lovers and contacts. Can you see my hand? I’m there- standing on my toes with my raised hand. How many other hands do you see; if any? Is yours up there?

Yes. I am livid. I am livid that our government is collecting our communications and information without any warrant or oversight. I am appalled by our government storing all our data in its massive database with zero oversight or accountability. It is frightening; truly. But let me tell you something: right now I am even more appalled and alarmed by individuals obtaining our data, commoditizing it, and handing it over to companies and individuals around the world.

Nine months ago I was one of many who thought we had a new whistleblower who had gone out on a limb to obtain a few documents in order to expose how our government has been violating our Constitution and rights with its illegal surveillance operations. Today, nine months after this individual came out publicly, sporting the title whistleblower, I am watching in horror a far more terrifying and outrageous plot unfolding before my own eyes.

When the story first broke I, among others, assumed that Edward Snowden had taken a few documents to illustrate the unconstitutional abuses and violations committed by the NSA.

Then, in July 2013, Greenwald told Der Spiegel he and Laura Poitras had each received a complete archive from Snowden which totaled 9,000-10,000 documents.

A few weeks later that same Glenn Greenwald told the Brazilian Senate that he possessed up to 20,000 documents.

Fast forward one month, and in its court statement over the temporary detention of David Miranda, the UK government said Miranda was carrying 58,000 documents which took up around 60 gigabytes of disk space.

And now, nine months later, we are told that Snowden is believed to have used web crawlers to access and obtain about 1.7 million documents.

First, the ever-changing story and document number establish Snowden and the involved so-called journalists as dishonest and liars. Oddly enough, no one in the mainstream media is calling them on the constantly changing and contradicting story line.

Second, it illustrates that there is no way these documents were obtained discreetly or with any due diligence. How could anyone suck up 1.7 million documents with a web crawler and claim that the act was performed ethically and with diligence? If the individual’s intention was to illustrate a case of clear and present unconstitutionality and criminality, why go suck up millions of documents indiscriminately? Why not care how many of those documents are on legitimate targets or investigations? Why not be wary of some of the documents containing private citizens’ private information?

Third, it shows a complete lack of responsibility for Snowden to carry with him around the world over one million indiscriminately obtained Top Secret documents. By his own admission Snowden used his own credit card and identity to travel to Hong Kong, and he remained there for almost three weeks while registered in a hotel under his own name, passport ID, and credit card number. What kind of individual would commit such an act while in possession of 1.7 million documents pertaining to Americans’ personal data, U.S. government intelligence, and even other nations’ proprietary information?

Fourth, much of the initial story was given glitzy attention based on the claim that Snowden had obtained these documents with one pure purpose: Making it all public for the public’s benefit and the people’s right to know. However, to date, after nine months into the story, the people have received less than 1% of the obtained documents.

Now, let’s talk about the entities who have been given these documents (the entire cache):

We know that Glenn Greenwald has been given the entire cache by Snowden. He has shrewdly enriched himself with the cache: from a seven-figure book deal to a movie deal and a new cushy venture with a billionaire boss. To read more about this Click Here . As you can see, having access to documents that purportedly contain our information, other nations’ information, and much information related to many corporations, were commoditized and utilized to obtain financial and career gains.

We know that Glenn Greenwald’s Brazilian boyfriend was given access to the entire cache by Edward Snowden as well. To read more about this Click Here

We know that film-maker Laura Poitras was given the Snowden Cache. She too has been rewarded with high-sums and a billionaire-sponsored lucrative career deal for the documents.

We know that other publications such as Washington Post and Guardian have been given a large share of these documents. Speaking of the Washington Post, another billionaire seems to be getting his money’s worth in this deal as well: Amazon’s Jeff Bezos

Let’s recap it so far: Billionaire corporatists such as Pierre Omidyar and Jeff Bezos have access to Edward Snowden’s 1.7 million stolen documents. Several mainstream news corporations such as Guardian and the New York Times have their nice-size cache. A few ambitious and dollar-oriented American and foreign individuals have joint ownership of Edward Snowden’s stolen documents.

So let me ask you, it was horrible and scary enough to know that the United States Government was able to obtain and store our data. Please tell me how you feel about the fact that now, along with the U.S. government, billionaire corporatists such as PayPal’s Pierre Omidyar and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, and dollar-hungry opportunist individuals such as Glenn Greenwald, Brazilian David Miranda and Laura Poitras, all have our data to do with as they wish?

Please don’t write off the value of Snowden’s cache to billionaire corporatists like Pierre Omidyar. Think about what he could do with all that info. Could he have an advantage over his competitors, considering that the NSA cache contains tons of documents on many major companies? You bet. Could he use some of the stolen data to blackmail his competitors here and abroad? Surely. Could he utilize Snowden’s stolen documents to blackmail and receive favors from the U.S. government? Of course. Now, do you see how $250 million may prove to be a small price to pay for what may gain billions for him? I am sure you do.

The lack of outrage and protest against the privatization and commoditization of the Snowden Cache may in fact pave the way for the government to do the exact same thing itself; directly- without middlemen such as Snowden and sleazy hungry journalists. Let me give you a few examples:

Texas DMV Sells Personal Information to Hundreds Of Companies; Drivers Not Allowed to Opt-Out

Legal Theft: Florida DMV Makes Millions Legally Selling Personal Information

DMV Wants to Market Drivers’ Records for Sale

That’s right. Let’s apply what opportunist journalists are doing here to our government. What if the government elects to sell a portion of its questionably obtained information from its citizens to major private corporations like Microsoft or PayPal or Amazon? Would you consider such an act outrageous and illegal? Okay. Then, why is it okay for a thief to obtain 1.7 million documents pertaining to our data, hand over that indiscriminately obtained data to a few greedy opportunists, and have those opportunists sell the data to mega corporations? Maybe this is what Snowden and his opportunist accomplices together with billionaire corporatist sugar daddies paved the way for: To kosher-ize privatization, commoditization and monetization of the people’s data by the government.

How is it that the majority of privacy activists are so alarmed and outraged at the idea of having our government collect and store our personal and business data, yet, these same individuals are not up-in-arms about that same data being commoditized and privatized and monetized by ruthless billionaires and greedy individuals? I don’t get it, do you? Is it a case of willful ignorance? Is it a case of blinded judgment brought on by glitzy publicity campaigns? Or is it a case of not seeing the forest for the trees? You tell me.

# # # #

Sibel Edmonds is the Publisher & Editor of Boiling Frogs Post and the author of the Memoir Classified Woman: The Sibel Edmonds Story. She is the recipient of the 2006 PEN Newman’s Own First Amendment Award for her “commitment to preserving the free flow of information in the United States in a time of growing international isolation and increasing government secrecy” Ms. Edmonds has a MA in Public Policy and International Commerce from George Mason University, a BA in Criminal Justice and Psychology from George Washington University.

- See more at: http://www.boilingfrogspost.com/2014/02/11/the-snowden-effect-from-governmentalized-to-privatized-commoditized/#sthash.YsTVQ9i5.dpuf

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ckaihatsu
19th February 2014, 21:37
Border Bother - Snowden's lawyer 'harassed' at Heathrow Airport

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MeCFD8rQzA

ckaihatsu
20th February 2014, 00:17
Student Support: Snowden elected rector at Glasgow University

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J67Myy0KGHE


US, UK spied on people who visited WikiLeaks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nv3VH4RxUG0

ckaihatsu
24th February 2014, 23:36
'No guarantee NSA will stop spying on Germany or Merkel'

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Au0y2kXZwpc


Broken Promise: NSA continues spying on Merkel aides

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VC_7WZ5717E


Brazil's Rousseff eyes new Internet link with the EU

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58JzUgllIAM